Tidbits from the Masters:
Four hardest holes (in order): 11, 10, 7 and 1.
Four easiest holes (in order): 15, 8, 2, 13.
Easiest hole not a par 5: 3 (the only par 4 on the course under 400 yds), with an average score of 4.03, ranking it 13th. Next easiest par 4: 14.
Round 4 was notably harder than round 3 -- 74.66 vs. 72.57 scoring average. Twice as many double/others Sunday vs. Saturday, 25 fewer birdies, and 52 more bogeys.
The front nine all four days played slightly more difficult than the back nine: 36.90 to 36.88
Interestingly (to me), 12 played as the easiest of the course's par 3s during the tourney. 4 played the toughest, followed by 16 and 6 (nearly equally difficult during the tourney). 12 did play as the second-toughest of the par 3s on Sunday, however.
Finally, the stats between Immelman and Tiger are pretty revealing. For me, they reinforce the notion that Augusta is emerging as a course that puts a premium on driving accuracy. Zach Johnson last year -- among the half-dozen or so players who contended on Sunday -- was far and away the most accurate driver of the bunch. Same held true this year; Immelman ranked 1st overall in driving accuracy, and hit 48 or 56 fairways, or fully 10 more than Tiger. It certainly accounted for Immelman's lead in birdies -- they each had four birdies on the par 5s (Tiger eagled one par 5), but Immelman had 11 birdies on the par 4s compared to only six for Tiger. Immelman hit one more GIR than Tiger during the tourney.
Two more interesting stats about Tiger:
-- He was 1 for 6 in sand saves, an abysmal percentage for someone who has the best short game in golf (I remember Tiger saying when he turned pro that he was an admittedly poor sand player, and worked hard at becoming better).
-- He had 11 birdies and one eagle this week. That seems like an awfully small number for someone who seemingly owns the course, and a course that is nearly ideally set up for his game (long, hits lots of greens, usually a very good putter, aggressive by nature in going after a course). Have the changes at Augusta denuded his game? Or turned him into a safe, wait-for-others-to-fold golfer at this particular course? Or did he just have a bad week with the putter?